Timeline for We will launch the 1-rep voting experiment on Stack Overflow for 4–6 weeks, along with account creation prompts
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
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Apr 5 at 5:47 | comment | added | Adriaan | I agree here; it seems this experiment is rigged, given no hard control parameters are defined in the post. After the experiment they can cook up as many statistics as they want and cherry pick those that show "increasing participation" making this experiment a success, and only show statistics that do not show fraud to validate that this is indeed a good decision. This entire experiment appears to be just for show with a foregone conclusion. | |
Apr 4 at 8:13 | comment | added | SPArcheon - on strike | I love the linked wikipedia article, it really captures my feeling about this tests. The deceptive writing of this announcement, the way it handwaves what was basically a 100% disagreement from the site mods as "included dissenting views" really show how the company is carefully crafting their own propaganda focused on partial truths. Only showing partial data that matches the expectations you want to sell... seems very likely. | |
Apr 3 at 21:34 | history | edited | Bryan Krause | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
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Apr 3 at 21:33 | history | rollback | Bryan Krause |
Rollback to Revision 1
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Apr 3 at 21:30 | history | edited | starball | CC BY-SA 4.0 |
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Apr 3 at 20:10 | comment | added | user1937198 | How about we do this the way the company has treated AI. The test can go ahead, once the company has provided subtle heuristics to the moderator team for how to measure fraud, which once the moderator team has approved, the company can then proceed against experiments that rely on. Oh yes, because the company doesn't actually care about this being a partnership, they want all there things to go through as fast as possible, whilst the community proposals get stuck in councils, committees and approvals. | |
Apr 3 at 15:46 | history | answered | Bryan Krause | CC BY-SA 4.0 |